Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO
Description
Abstract Text
This is a proposal for a study of the role of patient preferences and
other factors in choices regarding use of prenatal screening for and
diagnosis Of chromosomal disorders in a racially/ethnically diverse
population. We propose to explore the distribution of prenatal screening
and diagnosis choices made at our institution, which serves a
racially/ethnically and socioeconomically diverse population. We also
will collect detailed information regarding the distribution of
individual preferences for test characteristics and outcomes by
racial/ethnic group, as well as other factors which may be related to
choices regarding the use of these tests. These data will be collected
from women in the obstetrics clinics, to capture the preferences of all
pregnant women who will be 35 or older at the time of delivery, not just
those who attend genetic counseling. State-of-the-art preference
measurement methods, including visual analog scaling and the standard
gamble, will be used to elicit preferences from women who are facing a
decision to undergo-or forgo-testing, and which test to use. Using both
decision-analytic and regression techniques, we will compare "predicted"
choices (based on expected utility theory) to actual choices made, and
we will analyze the contribution of patient preferences and other factors
in the choices we observe. We also will explore the cost effectiveness
of current and proposed age- and risk-based guidelines for prenatal
testing, and compare them to the estimated cost effectiveness of a
reference-based guideline. Information generated in this study will
ultimately be used in the
development of a decision-assisting technology to help women of diverse
backgrounds make informed choices regarding testing that reflect their
underlying preferences, and in the delineation of guidelines for use of
prenatal diagnostic services that place greater emphasis on patient
presences and values, in addition to risk.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
African AmericanAsian AmericansDowns syndromeHispanic Americansage at pregnancyamniocentesiscaucasian Americanchorionic villus samplingchromosome disordersdecision makinggenetic counselinggenetic disorder diagnosishealth behaviorhealth care service availabilityhealth care service utilizationhealth economicshuman pregnant subjectinterviewpreferencepregnancyprenatal diagnosisracial /ethnic differencesocioeconomicsstatistics /biometrywomen's health
No Sub Projects information available for 1R01HG001255-01
Publications
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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